I have now an early release of my floppy image extractor web application online. It looks still pretty rudimentary, but the functionality is there (upload image, download as zip, or download single files from the image).

I develop a free Word (for Windows) add-in that's available for Word 2007 upwards. It's a fix-it toolbox that will allow power Word users to fix document errors. You can find it at: http://www.mikestoolbox.co.uk

Well, yes, I would like to implement support for Atari XL images, and maybe others, but I need to get more information about them. I'm not sure, for example, if Krypto-Flux-images (IPF?) could be meaningfully processed. Generally, my tool is based on a Java library that I put on Github, so all information about current format support is always there:

The project not only contains the Java source code for processing floppy images, but also documents about these formats. I think I probably have enough information for an implementation of an Atari XL handler (these images seem to be relatively simple), but other formats are somewhat more complicated. I had the luxury of using the work of others to get support for the ".ST" (based on a DOS ".IMG" library) and the ".ADF" (Amiga, ported from a JavaScript library) formats, but for other new formats, I'll have to do all the hard work myself.

Mug UK wrote:How easy would it be to make it a stand-alone util (I assume using Java) so it would run locally?

There actually IS a tool built into the library. It just has a very primitive Swing UI, and it does not allow to extract single files; only to look at the contents, and then extract them all into a Zip file. The tool comes as an executable Jar file, so you have to have a Java 8 runtime environment installed in order to use it. Then you could just double-click the Jar file. I have not yet any defined download-location for that, but I will do that this evening. I'll just put it on the same webserver that houses the online web application, and then I'll put a link into the online app. I'll post a notice here when it's done.

I develop a free Word (for Windows) add-in that's available for Word 2007 upwards. It's a fix-it toolbox that will allow power Word users to fix document errors. You can find it at: http://www.mikestoolbox.co.uk